When I started learning religion from both the mentor and
his student, Mawlānā Amīn Ahsn Islāhī and Javed Ahmad Ghāmidī sāhib, almost at
the same time from 1980 onward, the few people I knew who were doing likewise
many years before me included Ishāq Nāgī sāhib.
I can’t imagine his picture in mind without a peculiar
smile on the face. He was soft in his speech but strong in opinions. His
opinions were never without sound arguments. One could always disagree with
them, and he allowed the other person to disagree, but one couldn’t accuse him
of forming opinions without giving the contesting views a good chance of
influencing him.
Nāgī sāhib, as we, his junior friends in the fraternity,
would call him, was fond of books and audio cassettes of religious lectures
delivered by scholars. For a very long time, he had the largest collection of
audio cassettes of Jāved Ghāmidī sāhib’s lectures. He made it a point to be
present on each occasion where a lecture was to be delivered for him to
willingly undertake the self-imposed obligation of preserving the valuable words
of the scholar. He used to undertake the entire exercise with enthusiasm and
missionary zeal.
His love for reading and collecting books on religion was
enviable. He had a particularly clear understanding of who was right and who was
wrong in the famous disputes of Muslim history and he had his books ready to be
shown as evidence to prove his point. He urged me on several occasions, even
though in most cases unsuccessfully, to read the books he thought were important
for me to read in Muslim history. Even without becoming a religious scholar at
the level that would enable him to disseminate the message of Islam directly, he
got involved in the process at a one-to-one level, through meeting people,
arranging for audio cassettes of scholars and religious books and lending them
to others.
Nāgī sāhib was a brave man, a fighter against odds, and a
determined soul. I remember when more than two decades ago he got seriously
injured by the cut of a knife which was inflicted on him by a fellow worker in a
factory, he had a calm expression on his face while explaining to us what had
happened when we visited him in the hospital. One of his daughters developed
serious abdominal problems on inadvertently drinking a chemical. Even though he
was informed by some doctors that hers was a hopeless case, he never lost hope
and eventually ended up getting her cured through Dr Khawājah Jāved who was a
famous gastroenterologist. The late doctor was himself a devout Muslim with a
strong favourable leaning towards the Mujāhidīn of Afghanistan and Taliban. Nāgī
sāhib used to take his daughter early in the morning for several years,
exchanging religious views with the soft-spoken, extremely pious, and resolutely
determined doctor. When the latter was killed by those who opposed his strong
support for the Taliban, Nāgī sāhib, despite his difference of opinion, was
extremely sad on learning about his death.
The late Nāgī sāhib never lost any opportunity to correct
others when he thought they were saying or doing something unacceptable. I
received calls from him on numerous occasions telling me that I had said
something on a television program which wasn’t correct. In most of the cases he
used to be right in his observation. I owe it to him that he guided me towards
the correct understanding on religious issues many times.
The way Nāgī sāhib battled with cancer in the last two
years of his life was simply because of his strong faith in God and the next
life. Each time I met him during the last days of his life, knowing clearly that
the duration of his stay was very brief, he had only one concern: Will the
Almighty forgive his sins? From what I know of him, I am very hopeful that the
Almighty will respond positively to his concern and cause the suffering he went
through in the last few years of his life to become a reason for the atonement
of his sins.
I heard it from Nāgī sāhib that Mawlānā Amīn Ahsan Islāhī
said only a few days before his death: “Although I am in pain, yet it is nowhere
close to the suffering of the hereafter. I hope my God will forgive all my sins
in lieu of the pain I have endured now.” I pray that the Almighty accept my
mentor’s prayer, who was also my mentor’s mentor too. And I also pray to God to
kindly forgive all the sins of my late brother, Ishāq Nāgī.
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